Re The Incredibles, the family is pretty much the same "family" invented in Fifties sit-com when women were being ushered back into the kitchen after working in WWII. And that sort of stuff is still with us, in things like According to Jim and, yes, the Incredibles. Despite all the fury in the thread, she has in fact correctly read most of the subtext. The emphasis on Mr. Incredible attacking Mirage is possibly the biggest error, not just because cartoon violence is always problematic (is it really violence at all?) But in context his reaction is to loss of the (civilizing) love, not a reaction to Mirage. (Not realizing Vonnegut's Harrison Bergeron is ironic is a strong contender though.)
I don't agree that this emphasis on culture or lifestyle or identity is genuinely political. The notion that all we need to do is to clean up our stinking thinking is really just another version of waiting for the Holy Spirit to change our natures. Desperately seeking the paragons in fiction to help us think straight isn't a real policy. Her perspective gives a kind of foreshortening. Conventional thinkers might notice that Elastigirl is indeed strong and that would loom larger to them than it does to someone who realizes that in most of the movie she is also indeed strong---like a workhorse.
What precisely are people so outraged about, though? The woman obviously has strong opinions, but she makes a case. About the only disagreement expressed was pointing out that it was Edith Head instead of Anna Wintour! Why didn't I think about the "hero" choking Mirage? I think I explained why above. No one else even conceded that someone could find that offensive! (I never would have realized I didn't really see that without reading this, even though some of it is just wrong. It passes the merit test of provoking real thought.)
Is it really so incredible to think that maybe all sorts of tacit assumptions prevail in most commercial movies and television? That maybe they reinforce the status quo? That maybe the status quo isn't justice? A thread dedicated to sharing the outrage (and the warm glow of a good hate session?) at such thoughts inadvertently makes a political statement of its own, I think. The idea that seeing the artistic excellence of The Incredibles being
slandered like that is an outrage meriting three pages of spluttering is a little cracked too.
Last---Briefly scanning through some of the links I ran across some research visit to a porno shop which sparked outrage about the display of "sacred" vulvas. Plainly some really hidebound religious notions are still floating around in there. Certainly there is little sign that this woman or her friends are actually leftists in the classical sense.
I don't agree that this emphasis on culture or lifestyle or identity is genuinely political. The notion that all we need to do is to clean up our stinking thinking is really just another version of waiting for the Holy Spirit to change our natures. Desperately seeking the paragons in fiction to help us think straight isn't a real policy. Her perspective gives a kind of foreshortening. Conventional thinkers might notice that Elastigirl is indeed strong and that would loom larger to them than it does to someone who realizes that in most of the movie she is also indeed strong---like a workhorse.
What precisely are people so outraged about, though? The woman obviously has strong opinions, but she makes a case. About the only disagreement expressed was pointing out that it was Edith Head instead of Anna Wintour! Why didn't I think about the "hero" choking Mirage? I think I explained why above. No one else even conceded that someone could find that offensive! (I never would have realized I didn't really see that without reading this, even though some of it is just wrong. It passes the merit test of provoking real thought.)
Is it really so incredible to think that maybe all sorts of tacit assumptions prevail in most commercial movies and television? That maybe they reinforce the status quo? That maybe the status quo isn't justice? A thread dedicated to sharing the outrage (and the warm glow of a good hate session?) at such thoughts inadvertently makes a political statement of its own, I think. The idea that seeing the artistic excellence of The Incredibles being
slandered like that is an outrage meriting three pages of spluttering is a little cracked too.
Last---Briefly scanning through some of the links I ran across some research visit to a porno shop which sparked outrage about the display of "sacred" vulvas. Plainly some really hidebound religious notions are still floating around in there. Certainly there is little sign that this woman or her friends are actually leftists in the classical sense.